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Links Between Hydrothermal Environments, Pyrophosphate, Na+, and Early Evolution

✍ Scribed by Nils G. Holm; Herrick Baltscheffsky


Book ID
106490020
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
274 KB
Volume
41
Category
Article
ISSN
1573-0875

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✦ Synopsis


The discovery that photosynthetic bacterial membrane-bound inorganic pyrophosphatase (PPase) catalyzed light-induced phosphorylation of orthophosphate (Pi) to pyrophosphate (PPi) and the capability of PPi to drive energy requiring dark reactions supported PPi as a possible early alternative to ATP. Like the proton-pumping ATPase, the corresponding membrane-bound PPase also is a H^+^-pump, and like the Na^+^-pumping ATPase, it can be a Na^+^-pump, both in archaeal and bacterial membranes. We suggest that PPi and Na^+^ transport preceded ATP and H^+^ transport in association with geochemistry of the Earth at the time of the origin and early evolution of life. Life may have started in connection with early plate tectonic processes coupled to alkaline hydrothermal activity. A hydrothermal environment in which Na^+^ is abundant exists in sediment-starved subduction zones, like the Mariana forearc in the W Pacific Ocean. It is considered to mimic the Archean Earth. The forearc pore fluids have a pH up to 12.6, a Na^+^-concentration of 0.7 mol/kg seawater. PPi could have been formed during early subduction of oceanic lithosphere by dehydration of protonated orthophosphates. A key to PPi formation in these geological environments is a low local activity of water.


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